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Glenn Greenwald has revealed that GCHQ has developed the means to manipulate online polls, boost website page views and automatically extract social media data. The tools, which have been published in full online via Greenwald's publication the Intercept, come from GCHQ's Joint Threat Research Intelligence Group (JTRIG). They follow up from a series of JTRIG tactics already revealed by Edward Snowden, including the fact the agency spied on Facebook and YouTube users.

The list of "Tools and Techniques", compiled in the style of a Wikipedia article, features a few old favourites, including distributed denial of service attacks. But there are a host of new ones, each with its own ridiculous name. Angry Pirate, for instance, is a tool that helps GCHQ disable a user's account on their computer. Godfather and Fatyak involve public data collection from Facebook and LinkedIn respectively, while other programmes allow GCHQ to make automatic postings itself.

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Miniature Hero is for listening in on Skype calls in "real time", which immediately flags up concerns about the level of Microsoft's involvement. It was in 2013, shortly after Snowden's leaks first hit the papers, that it was revealed Microsoft had handed encrypted messages over to the NSA, so that it could infiltrate email, cloud storage and web chats.

There are also a few odd tools in the document that make the agency sound far from the professional, confident enterprise you might imagine, including Viewer, "A programme that (hopefully) provides advance tip off of the kidnappers IP address for MHMG personnel".

It is the manipulations of online media, however, that sound the most unnerving. Clean Sweep, for instance, is designed to let the agency "masquerade Facebook wall posts for individuals or entire countries". Gateway is designed to increase traffic to a particular website while Slipstream lets GCHQ increase page views. Underpass lets the agency "change outcome of online polls" while Badger acts as an email spammer and Warpath as an SMS spamming system. Gestator lets GCHQ "amplify" a message on platforms like YouTube.

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The entries are listed alongside a status column, which tells us whether they were "in development" or "ready to fire" at the time Snowden took them in 2012. It's safe to assume, plenty more have been added to the roster since this time.

The idea that GCHQ is boosting the online presence of particular videos or articles online, is alarming. It could be that GCHQ is boosting these articles in some shape of form to engender peace, as it sees it. But it's also highly likely that they would be used to a political end that is not rigidly reviewed.

This week, the spy agency is on trial at the Investigatory Powers Tribunal (IPT) to decide whether the mass surveillance of British citizens is justified under law. It is the evident lack of checks and balances that has led GCHQ here, to a place where the public does not trust that it is holding our human rights in as high regard as it is legally bound to.